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  1. 17 de may. de 2024 · Lewis Terman, American psychologist known for developing the individual intelligence test widely used in the United States, the Stanford-Binet test, and for launching a comprehensive longitudinal study of the lives of gifted children that continued under other researchers well after Terman’s death.

  2. Hace 18 horas · La llegada del psicólogo estadounidense Lewis Terman en la escena marcó un nuevo capítulo en la historia de los tests de inteligencia. En 1916, Terman adaptó la Escala Binet-Simon para su uso en Estados Unidos y la renombró como la Escala Stanford-Binet.

  3. Hace 5 días · Lewis Terman y sus colegas de la Universidad de Stanford ampliaron y revisaron la prueba de Binet. Ideó una medida mejorada de inteligencia para adultos y una serie de pruebas de coeficiente intelectual que redujeron el énfasis en la capacidad verbal. También introdujo un nuevo sistema de puntuación basado en la distribución ...

  4. 25 de may. de 2024 · Psychologist Lewis Terman adapted the Stanford-Binet intelligence test and used it to argue for racial differences in intelligence. The first practical intelligence test was developed between 1905 and 1908 by Alfred Binet in France for school placement of children.

  5. 14 de may. de 2024 · IQ was originally computed by taking the ratio of mental age to chronological (physical) age and multiplying by 100. Thus, if a 10-year-old child had a mental age of 12 (that is, performed on the test at the level of an average 12-year-old), the child was assigned an IQ of 12 / 10 × 100, or 120. If the 10-year-old had a mental age of 8, the child’s IQ would be 8 / 10 × 100, or 80.

  6. 17 de may. de 2024 · When psychologist Lewis Terman launched his decades-long study of high-IQ children in 1921, he had a specific goal in mind: to prove that "gifted" people were born leaders, and superior in just...

  7. 16 de may. de 2024 · The bias was further strengthened by Lewis Terman, when he transposed Binet and Simon’s test to America. The first edition of the American test (Lewis, 1916) rightly calls the American test “The Stanford revision of the Binet-Simon Intelligence Scale”.

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